(eardrum(- The middle ear is an air-filled cavity in the temporal bone

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Transcript (eardrum(- The middle ear is an air-filled cavity in the temporal bone

The external ear funnels sound waves to the external auditory meatus.tsound. From
the meatus, the external auditory canal passes inward to the tympanic membrane
(eardrum(The middle ear is an air-filled cavity in the temporal bone that opens via the auditory
(eustachian) tube into the nasopharynx and through the nasopharynx to
the exterior. The tube is usually closed, but during swallowing, chewing, and
yawning it opens, keeping the air pressure on the two sides of the eardrum
equalized. The three auditory ossicles, the malleus, incus, and stapes, are located in
the middle ear. The manubrium (handle of the malleus) is attached
to the back of the tympanic membrane. Its head is attached to the wall of the middle
ear, and its short process is attached to the incus, which in turn articulates
with the head of the stapes. . Its foot plate is attached by an annular ligament to the
walls of the ovalwindow . Two small skeletal muscles, the tensor tympani and the
stapedius, are also located in the middle ear. Contraction of the former pulls
the manubrium of the malleus medially and decreases the vibrations of the
tympanic membrane; contraction of the latter pulls the footplate of the stapes out of
the oval window.
Inner Ear
The inner ear (labyrinth) is made up of two parts,
one within the other. The bony labyrinth is a series
of channels in the petrous portion of the temporal
bone. Inside these channels, surrounded by a fluid
called perilymph, is the membranous labyrinth This
membranous structure more or less
duplicates the shape of the bony channels. It is filled
with a fluid called endolymph, and there is no
communication between the spaces filled with
endolymph and those filled with perilymph.
Cochlea
The cochlear portion of the labyrinth is a coiled tube
which in humans is 35 mm long and makes many
turns. it is devide into three chambers (scalae) The
upper scala vestibuli and the lower scala tympani
contain perilymph and communicate with each other
at the apex of the cochlea through a small opening
called the helicotrema. At the base of the cochlea,
the scala vestibuli ends at
the oval window,. The scala tympani ends at the
round window, The scala media, the middle cochlear
chamber does not communicate with the other two
(scalae. It contains endolymph.
Organ of Corti
Located on the basilar membrane is the organ of Corti, the structure that contains
the hair cells which are the auditory receptors. This organ extends from the
apex to the base of the cochlea and consequently has a spiral shape. The processes
of the hair cells pierce the tough, membrane-like reticular lamina that is
supported by the rods of Corti (Figure 9-4). The hair cells are arranged in four rows:
three rows of outer hair cells lateral to the tunnel formed by the rods of
Corti, and one row of inner hair cellsThe axons of the afferent neurons that innervate
the hair cells form the auditory (cochlear) division of the vestibulocochlear acoustic
nerve and terminate in the dorsal and ventral cochlear nuclei of the medulla
oblongata
Central Auditory Pathways
From the cochlear nuclei, auditory impulses pass via a variety of pathways to the
inferior colliculi, the centers for auditory reflexes, and via the medial
geniculate body in the thalamus to the auditory cortex. Others enter the reticular
formation (Figure 9-5). Information from both ears converges on each
superior olive, and at all higher levels most of the neurons respond to inputs from
both sides. The primary auditory cortex, Brodmann's area 41,
HEARING
Sound Waves
Sound is the sensation produced when longitudinal vibrations of the molecules in the
external environment, ie, alternate phases of condensation and
rarefaction of the molecules, strike the tympanic membrane. A plot of these
movements as changes in pressure on the tympanic membrane per unit of time is a
series of waves (Figure 9-10), and such movements in the environment are generally
called sound waves. The waves travel through air at a speed of
approximately 344 m/s (770 miles/h) at 20 °C at sea level. The speed of sound
increases with temperature and with altitude
Generally speaking, the loudness of a sound is correlated with the amplitude of a
sound wave and its pitch with the frequency (number of waves per unit of
time).. The amplitude of a sound wave can be expressed in terms of the maximum
pressure change at the eardrum,
Functions of the Tympanic Membrane & Ossicles
In response to the pressure changes produced by sound waves on its external surface,
the tympanic membrane moves in and out. The membrane therefore
functions as a resonator that reproduces the vibrations of the sound source. It stops
vibrating almost immediately when the sound wave stops; ie, it is very
nearly critically damped. The motions of the tympanic membrane are imparted to
the manubrium of the malleus. The malleus rocks on an axis through the
junction of its long and short processes, so that the short process transmits the
vibrations of the manubrium to the incus. The incus moves in such a way that
the vibrations are transmitted to the head of the stapes. Movements of the head of
the stapes swing its footplate to and fro like a door hinged at the posterior
edge of the oval window. The auditory ossicles thus function as a lever system that
converts the resonant vibrations of the tympanic membrane into movements
of the stapes against the perilymph-filled scala vestibuli of the cochlea This system
increases the sound pressure that arrives at the oval window,
because the lever action of the malleus and incus multiplies the force 1.3 times and
the area of the tympanic membrane is much greater than the area of the
footplate of the stapes. There are losses of sound energy as a result of resistance
sound energy incident on the tympanic membrane is transmitted to the fluid in the
cochlea.
Tympanic Reflex
When the middle ear muscles—the tensor tympani and the stapedius—contract, they
pull the manubrium of the malleus inward and the footplate of the stapes
outward. This decreases sound transmission. Loud sounds initiate a reflex contraction
of these muscles generally called the tympanic reflex. Its function is
protective, preventing strong sound waves from causing excessive stimulation of the
auditory receptors.
Bone & Air Conduction
Conduction of sound waves to the fluid of the inner ear via the tympanic membrane
and the auditory ossicles, the main pathway for normal hearing, is called
ossicular conduction. Sound waves also initiate vibrations of the secondary tympanic
membrane that closes the round window. This process, unimportant in
normal hearing, is air conduction. A third type of conduction, bone conduction, is the
transmission of vibrations of the bones of the skull to the fluid of the
inner ear. Considerable bone conduction occurs when tuning forks or other vibrating
bodies are applied directly to the skull. This route also plays a role in
transmission of extremely loud sounds.
Functions of the Inner & Outer Hair Cells
The inner hair cells are the primary sensory cells that generate action potentials in the
auditory nerves,
The outer hair cells, on the other hand, have a different function. These respond to
sound, like the inner hair cells, but depolarization makes them shorten and
hyperpolarization makes them lengthen. They do this over a very flexible part of the
basal membrane, and this action somehow increases the amplitude and
clarity of sounds.